BOLIVIA: Bolivian Adventures

JINKLE

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USA, Bolivia
Bolivia Aug 8-12, 2024
Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Benelli 20 Gauges
50-65 degrees, 5-20 mph wind

Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.25.40 PM.png


I never got around to posting this but I guess it is better late than never. This trip came with short notice as I was picking up a cancellation spot on a group heading down to Bolivia for a dove and pigeon shoot. The group consisted of my boss from work and his buddies. With about 4 weeks to plan, I got to work making sure all of my paperwork and visa information would get me through customs. At the time, Bolivia has a socialist governing party that confiscated most of the citizens' weapons. I was told that there are only 2 outfitters in all of Bolivia that are licensed to hunt and own firearms.

Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.24.49 PM.png
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The flights consisted of a 7 am flight leaving Austin to Miami with a 12 hour layover and an overnight flight from Miami to Santa Cruz. Once we landed and dealt with customs, we were escorted from security to a charter bus where they had cold beer waiting. We took the bus 2 hours west of the city until we reached the lodge at Bolivian Adventures. The first day we were there, a cold front hit bringing 26 cm of rain so we did not hunt the first afternoon or the next morning due to the clay roads not being able to be driven upon. That day consisted of drinking and dominoes in the lodge by a hot tub and spa girls. The next day, we were able to get out to the fields that afternoon where we got to see the dove flying by the millions and were introduced to our bird boys for the trip. This was truly a sight to see and happy that we were able to hunt on the day of my 25th birthday. That night, the house girls made a birthday cake for me that came out after dinner. The next two days were fairly similar to each other. We would leave the lodge at 7 am and be out in the field shooting by 8:30, regroup for a field lunch and hunt the afternoon until 6 pm. This was a way we for sure knew we would pile up birds with all day shootings.

Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.27.36 PM.png
Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.28.29 PM.png


On the last evening hunt, we were brought out to a field with water tanks spaced throughout the field with Cayman Alligators swimming in each of them. As the birds would fall in the water, the gators would race to see who would be getting firsts for dinner. By the end of that hunt, I personally dropped 30 birds in the tank and the alligators were swimming slow towards the end of the hunt. In the evenings, we would regroup after showers and dinner to a night of drinking, dominoes, shooting pool, this toad game called Sapo, and a hot tub in the center of our lodge. On our last day, we were sent out to the fields for one more hour of shooting to see if we could get any more boxes added to our bills. After our final hunt, we were given our receipts which included final figures. They had me down for shooting 87 boxes of shells over the week and my bird boy picked up ~975 of my birds. After the bus ride back into the city, we were taken to a fancy dinner with a chef’s tasting menu before being sent back on our overnight flight to Miami. Overall, Bolivian Adventures is a great outfitter with amazing hospitality and great bird shooting that I hope to return to one day.
Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.33.04 PM.png
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Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.30.16 PM.png


I will leave you with this recipe, the margaritas of the trip, and I can say, even being from Texas, they were damn good.

Bolivian Adventures’ Margarita:
4 Shots Fresh Lime Juice
4 Shots Tres Plumas Curaçao’s Triple Sec
5 Shots Jose Cuervo Reposado Azul
1/2 Coffee Cup of Sugar
Add all to Blender
Blend, Add Ice, Blend

Screenshot 2025-02-19 at 3.33.53 PM.png
 
Bolivia Aug 8-12, 2024
Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Benelli 20 Gauges
50-65 degrees, 5-20 mph wind

View attachment 666620

I never got around to posting this but I guess it is better late than never. This trip came with short notice as I was picking up a cancellation spot on a group heading down to Bolivia for a dove and pigeon shoot. The group consisted of my boss from work and his buddies. With about 4 weeks to plan, I got to work making sure all of my paperwork and visa information would get me through customs. At the time, Bolivia has a socialist governing party that confiscated most of the citizens' weapons. I was told that there are only 2 outfitters in all of Bolivia that are licensed to hunt and own firearms.

View attachment 666618View attachment 666623

The flights consisted of a 7 am flight leaving Austin to Miami with a 12 hour layover and an overnight flight from Miami to Santa Cruz. Once we landed and dealt with customs, we were escorted from security to a charter bus where they had cold beer waiting. We took the bus 2 hours west of the city until we reached the lodge at Bolivian Adventures. The first day we were there, a cold front hit bringing 26 cm of rain so we did not hunt the first afternoon or the next morning due to the clay roads not being able to be driven upon. That day consisted of drinking and dominoes in the lodge by a hot tub and spa girls. The next day, we were able to get out to the fields that afternoon where we got to see the dove flying by the millions and were introduced to our bird boys for the trip. This was truly a sight to see and happy that we were able to hunt on the day of my 25th birthday. That night, the house girls made a birthday cake for me that came out after dinner. The next two days were fairly similar to each other. We would leave the lodge at 7 am and be out in the field shooting by 8:30, regroup for a field lunch and hunt the afternoon until 6 pm. This was a way we for sure knew we would pile up birds with all day shootings.

View attachment 666624View attachment 666625

On the last evening hunt, we were brought out to a field with water tanks spaced throughout the field with Cayman Alligators swimming in each of them. As the birds would fall in the water, the gators would race to see who would be getting firsts for dinner. By the end of that hunt, I personally dropped 30 birds in the tank and the alligators were swimming slow towards the end of the hunt. In the evenings, we would regroup after showers and dinner to a night of drinking, dominoes, shooting pool, this toad game called Sapo, and a hot tub in the center of our lodge. On our last day, we were sent out to the fields for one more hour of shooting to see if we could get any more boxes added to our bills. After our final hunt, we were given our receipts which included final figures. They had me down for shooting 87 boxes of shells over the week and my bird boy picked up ~975 of my birds. After the bus ride back into the city, we were taken to a fancy dinner with a chef’s tasting menu before being sent back on our overnight flight to Miami. Overall, Bolivian Adventures is a great outfitter with amazing hospitality and great bird shooting that I hope to return to one day.
View attachment 666636View attachment 666635View attachment 666632View attachment 666629

I will leave you with this recipe, the margaritas of the trip, and I can say, even being from Texas, they were damn good.

Bolivian Adventures’ Margarita:
4 Shots Fresh Lime Juice
4 Shots Tres Plumas Curaçao’s Triple Sec
5 Shots Jose Cuervo Reposado Azul
1/2 Coffee Cup of Sugar
Add all to Blender
Blend, Add Ice, Blend

View attachment 666638
Good report, can't wait to experience the hunt myself.
 
Good report, can't wait to experience the hunt myself.
Will always recommend! Great group of guys offering fantastic service and hunts.
 
@JINKLE Thank you for the report. Every bird hunter should have at least one trip to a place where they can shoot 87 boxes of shells. It makes up for a lot of days in the goose pit or the duck blind where nary a shot is heard. I have been to Bolivia many times, and hunted with Bolivian Adventures on a couple of them....agree totally. Excellent operation. As a side note, anyone advocating Socialism should have seen Bolivia before the current worthless and oppressive Govt got their hooks into the people. A paradise then, still a good hunting destination now. Many good hunting operations were put out of business by the ignorant President who feared that a shotgun may be used to assassinate him from 5 or 600 meters away. Anyway, I hope to hunt Bolivian Adventures again soon.....sounds like you will go back again too..........BTW.....nice photo selection in your report...........FWB
 
@JINKLE Thank you for the report. Every bird hunter should have at least one trip to a place where they can shoot 87 boxes of shells. It makes up for a lot of days in the goose pit or the duck blind where nary a shot is heard. I have been to Bolivia many times, and hunted with Bolivian Adventures on a couple of them....agree totally. Excellent operation. As a side note, anyone advocating Socialism should have seen Bolivia before the current worthless and oppressive Govt got their hooks into the people. A paradise then, still a good hunting destination now. Many good hunting operations were put out of business by the ignorant President who feared that a shotgun may be used to assassinate him from 5 or 600 meters away. Anyway, I hope to hunt Bolivian Adventures again soon.....sounds like you will go back again too..........BTW.....nice photo selection in your report...........FWB
No kidding on the socialism! I will return to Bolivian Adventures one day. There a couple other places I will visit first before I start making return trips.
 
Great report.
Thank you.
You are an excellent hunter and outdoorman.
 
No kidding on the socialism! I will return to Bolivian Adventures one day. There a couple other places I will visit first before I start making return trips.
It seems the term socialism is applied rather liberally. The ruling party is MAS and Socialist is in its name, but to what degree it has accomplished socialism is questionable. However, it must be doing something right as most independent observers found the last election to be fair (or fair enough). Attempts to totally take control of mineral resource industries have been somewhat watered down. Corruption runs rampant and there was significant violence and rioting in 2019 when the existing regime delayed the census which could have shifted the redistribution of parliament to opposition districts. I can understand why a country without stable govt, democracy or not, and rampant lawlessness and corruption might be apprehensive about citizens' free access to firearms.
 
It seems the term socialism is applied rather liberally. The ruling party is MAS and Socialist is in its name, but to what degree it has accomplished socialism is questionable. However, it must be doing something right as most independent observers found the last election to be fair (or fair enough). Attempts to totally take control of mineral resource industries have been somewhat watered down. Corruption runs rampant and there was significant violence and rioting in 2019 when the existing regime delayed the census which could have shifted the redistribution of parliament to opposition districts. I can understand why a country without stable govt, democracy or not, and rampant lawlessness and corruption might be apprehensive about citizens' free access to firearms.

Having spent time in Bolivia on many occasions, starting as far back as the mid 90’s, I can assure you that they have drifted further and further down the socialism path (also significantly less pro US path) over the last 20-25 years) and that they only wish to go deeper…

Many of their policies nudge up to communism..

They instituted ”conditional” ownership of private property about 15 years ago…

More than 60 industries have been converted to “state owned” in just the last 20 years.. more industries are on the hit list and will be nationalized over the next decade…

The list goes on and on..

Evo Morales, the Bolivian President from 2006-2019 is an avowed socialist.. Áñez replaced him for a few years.. she was a bit more neutral (although highly controversial)… Arce,replaced Anez and is still the president.. he is every bit as much an avowed socialist as Morales was.. in fact he ran for office on a platform where he claimed to be a bellwether for socialist ideals…

There is no liberal application of the word socialism when referencing Bolivia. They are indeed a socialist state.
 
Having spent time in Bolivia on many occasions, starting as far back as the mid 90’s, I can assure you that they have drifted further and further down the socialism path (also significantly less pro US path) over the last 20-25 years) and that they only wish to go deeper…

Many of their policies nudge up to communism..

They instituted ”conditional” ownership of private property about 15 years ago…

More than 60 industries have been converted to “state owned” in just the last 20 years.. more industries are on the hit list and will be nationalized over the next decade…

The list goes on and on..

Evo Morales, the Bolivian President from 2006-2019 is an avowed socialist.. Áñez replaced him for a few years.. she was a bit more neutral (although highly controversial)… Arce,replaced Anez and is still the president.. he is every bit as much an avowed socialist as Morales was.. in fact he ran for office on a platform where he claimed to be a bellwether for socialist ideals…

There is no liberal application of the word socialism when referencing Bolivia. They are indeed a socialist state.
Apparently it's what the people want. Sorta. Just can't decide which socialist faction at any given point in time. It seems the recent source of volatility is this regime stepping hard on opposition press. The Bolivian people won't put up with that.

Poor developing nations don't have the internal capital or expertise to develop their resources so they invite foreign investment = foreign ownership (in the old days called imperialism). No doubt at some point the people of the developing nation will desire to take control. But the transition is rarely an easy one. "Socialism" is just one vehicle. Understandably, it is appealing to simple folks who don't understand the complexity of a world economy.

Has the standard if living for most Bolivians improved under socialism? I guess that is the bottom line. Since the Socialist party was able to retain a majority (barely) in a fair election (reasonably fair anyway), I'm assuming there's a reason people are voting for socialism.
 
I enjoyed your adventurous hunt report, sounds like a lot a fun despite the political status. Glad y’all had a great time. Thanks for sharing.
 
Has the standard if living for most Bolivians improved under socialism? I guess that is the bottom line. Since the Socialist party was able to retain a majority (barely) in a fair election (reasonably fair anyway), I'm assuming there's a reason people are voting for socialism.

It depends on who you ask.. and also what you believe the future holds for them under the current model..

For the first few years under Morales the economy improved in almost every way.. no one can dispute that..

But for the last decade or so fractures are starting to get exposed to the economy’s underpinning and many believe if they keep going down the same path that they are headed toward a Venezuela situation and a complete economic collapse..



As to why they’re choosing socialism.. I suspect it’s the same reason socialist ideals are well received by the AOC and Bernie crowd… people love to be promised “free” shit… and don’t understand that nothing is ever really free… they don’t care that socialism is about govt control rather than control in the hands of the people.. they’re content with someone else determining most aspects of life as long as the free shit keeps getting promised (with some limited measure of delivery)…
 
Good report but not much information on the “spa girls”! Any pictures? Hahaha
Haha... was thinking the same. Spa girls, House girls? What is this all about and where are those pictures?
 

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